Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello the Internet, and welcome to season sixty seven, Episode
two off DAR Daily Night Guys, the podcast where we
take a deep dive into America's share consciousness using the
headlines box office reports, TV ratings, what's trending on Google?
It's so She Meets It's Tuesday, January twenty nine. Team,
my name is Jack O'Brien, a K. Brian. Brian say
(00:21):
Jack O'Brian and uh, that's courtesy of Hannas Houltis. That
was supposed to be loved me, loved me, says I
loved me, but my voice is such that it was
impossible to tell. Well. I'm thrilled to be joined as
always by my co host Mr Miles Right, Butterfly in
(00:41):
the Sky, I can get twice as Hi. We take
on Crooks, Spit a hook a reading grade, I can
go anywhere. Facts to know a killer show. We're reading
the site guys smoking at the same time. Thank you
(01:04):
to add Taylor T. Fleming for that reading Rainbow Aka.
I could see the intro of that show in my
mind as you were. Yeah, I love that show. Yeah,
as a kid, we should do it. And even then
I couldn't even read, and I loved it. That's how
you do it as a good show. Well, isn't the
show like him reading to you? Basically? Yeah? But still yeah,
I feel like, you know, I want to know what's
(01:25):
going on. Literally literally found that I've spent less of
my time since learning to read being read too. When
was the last time you were read to? Uh said
a while? Yeah, Well, I think that's a form of
self carolin being. There's something soothing about being read too.
I mean, there was that one time I had a
terrible accident and I had to have had a textbook
(01:47):
read read to me in college, But that was the
last time I think I was read to. Wait, what
was this accident and how did you get away with
this scam? I was? I was. I was at Hooters
and I was juggling the hot sauce and the cap
came off one of the mid air all over my eyes.
That can't be true. But they call me Blindie mcjuggles. Well,
(02:11):
we were through the beach going in our third seat
by the hilarious media and returning guests Mr Blake Wexler,
a k a. Blindie mcjuggles. The second second, Yeah, I
stold the thing. They know me there because I still
the thing that the paper twels would come on, because
I thought that was a funny bit, and then I
would just have a lot of paper towel dispensers. It
(02:31):
looked like it was just a wooden rod. That's not
a bit, that's fat. That's that's what I And you're right,
that's what the magistrate court said also, of course. But anyway,
there are a bunch of prudes over there in the
magistrate I've found. Yeah. Yeah, Well it's a bit when
you're doing it and it's completely purposeless, right, It's like,
well that's a mental illness. Well then I sell him
(02:53):
on Craigslist, right, that is funny? Is that theft? Yeah?
I have trouble sometimes, you know, discerning between the two.
It's hard. Yeah. Anyway, look, I'm just getting back from
illness now, Jack, I've passed the illness baton on to
know I was sick over the weekend. Uh. I couldn't
hear it in your voice. No, it sound great. I'm
glad I picked a a k that was relied on
(03:13):
me hitting high notes to be even identifiable. Uh. Well, Blake,
we're gonna get to know you a little bit better
in a moment First, we're going to listeners a couple
of the things we're talking about today. Aquaman is now
officially the biggest d C movie ever. We're gonna talk
about how that happened. And we're gonna talk about a
couple of millennial just bullshit marketing, just bullshit marketing in general.
(03:38):
It might not be millennia, I don't know how right.
You don't need to be a millennial to fall for
just crazy bullshit. We're gonna talk about and all the
people announcing who's looking good, who's terrifying, all Democrats, Howard Schultz.
We are going to talk about some inside information on
(03:59):
what happened when you go to the White House and
get a personal tour from the President, because since he
doesn't really work, he spends a lot of his time
in office just giving people personal tours and like a
Walmart greeter, right, just being like this is pretty cool, Huh,
I'm president, pretty cool? You want to buy for Meyer
Lemons for uh. And we're gonna talk about just a
(04:21):
new a new shade of Trump we're seeing for the
first time, just kind of angry, not happy, but unhappy
in a way that is I don't know, wounded, sort
of like sad sad boy Trump And we're going to
talk about baby shark and answer the question what is
baby shark and where from whence did it come? But first, Blake,
(04:43):
we like to ask our guest, what is something from
your search history that's revealing about who you are? Um? Well,
I sorry, sorry already? Is that phone sex hotline? Yes,
this is delicious. Dish phone was actually the last Google
search and it says a lot of pat man. I'm
(05:03):
a perfect response to phone sex. Yeah, there should have
been a predicate or something. Return slow tennis hits um
return slow tennis? Yeah, I just started playing tennis poorly
and my girlfriend I've been playing and she just keeps
dropping shots in on me and I keep charging the
(05:25):
net and not getting there inside. I think they're filled
drop shots in the tennis parlance. But I would have
never guessed that you weren't a lifelong player from calling
them tennis hits returns slow? How do I return those
slow tennis hits? And the general way that I dress
(05:47):
would also suggest that I have a huge tennis players
white headband on today for wristbands, Yeah, my Andrea, I
guess he's wig. My shorts do not go below the pelvis,
nor will they right? Never Ever, how long you've been playing,
uh like a month and a half? Yeah, does she play?
Did she get you into it? Or she got me
into gifted? Natural? She is like naturally athletics. So um
(06:11):
but yeah, she's way better than I am. But like
I've been youtubing it and um also, you know, clearly
having very in depth searches on Google. I'm sure there's
a lot of tennis play a lot of tennis watchers
in the oh, you know, shout out to nome osaka
fucking number one. Now, hold did she win the Australia
She did? Now ranked number one in congratulations? Yeah, she
(06:35):
might help you out. I don't know. She sounds busy,
but yeah, she can find a moment. I will occasionally
get into just like tennis slash table tennis slash like
watching tennis holes where I'm just like obsessed for like
a month and then just have to like break myself
out of it and just go back to watching Street
Loose and the X Games. I think the X Games
(06:56):
should happen six times a year, and what happens a
lot of Remember when the X Games were literally like
every season, it was like time for the fall X
games right into a really big pile of leagues, often
like uh, what is uh? What is something you think
is overrated? Overrated? Writing bad reviews about something like on
(07:20):
Yelp that the people I've surrounded myself around have raved
about it. And then it was time for me to
write a bad one about an Airbnb experience that I
had And it happened a week ago, and I still
haven't written it because I don't want to make someone
feel bad. Even so they made me feel terrible with
their thin floors through the floor that yeah, I can't
(07:42):
walk anymore, and I feel terrible for them. I don't
want them to be sued. Right, Yeah, now, what is
thin floors? How does that manifest itself? Like? He was
playing beer pong and he went for the slam and
then he went right through the floor. My plant foot
went right through the floor. Um. I could hear the
upstairs neighbor yawn, which was both relaxing and infuriating. Yeah,
(08:09):
at least someone's doing well. Was it contagious through the floorboards?
Did you then yawned because he yawned? Uh? In that case,
I didn't because I was too I had an adrenaline
rush of anger. But I've felt dirty in public when
I've caught a yawn from a stranger who you know, discussed, yeah,
oh god, what am I going to get? Wait? So
that was the worst of it. Was he so they
(08:31):
had a baby, they had a toddler who would scream
at five o'clock in the morning. There we go. But
but you're just giving us an idea of just how
thin you can hear a yawn. And then on top
of that, there was a young child, a very young child, screaming,
screaming at the top of its shrungs. D that's terrible, man,
But I agree to be fine. It's on the one hand,
(08:53):
you wanna feel it, you're kind of doing a service
for future people who are going to Like one time,
my wife and I got real in deep on this
bad Yelp review because the guy like kept like I
don't know, he had a way of like dealing with
Yelp where he would get our review deleted and it
was like such bad service. He like brought his dog
(09:15):
and gave our dog flees from his dog, and his
dog literally smelled like a walking piece of ship, Like
it just smelled the worst that you've ever the worst
smelling thing ever, And then he did a bad job.
It was he was like a Rhodo router. He would
like churn up your yard. The funniest Yelp review I
ever saw was someone created an account as Abraham Lincoln
(09:38):
and like made the photo of the account Abraham Lincoln
and reviewed the Fourth Theater as one star was killed
here one star? I do, I just create historical Yelp accounts.
That's awesome. Um, But anyways, we had to fight to
get it kept up. But once it was up, we
(10:00):
got like thirty people like thanking us for putting it
up because yeah, the guy was like basically manipulating Yelp
to keep it. But then I've had other times like
where it's not a Yelp thing where I'm just like,
you know, this giant tele communications company needs to hear
my complaint and it's just completely wasted out. Yeah, they
(10:22):
keep shaking your fist at the sky. They do not
give a crap about you. Wow, shout out to our
new sponsors Cox Cable. Uh, just back to your thing. Though,
you didn't want to give the in Airbnb review of
the place or you were going to go on yelp
(10:42):
to roast the airbnb thing. Oh no, no, no, the
in airb airb, because it's more to that in a
very direct way. Right, You're not going like this fucking miscreant.
You're just like, you know, if you're looking for a
RESTful evening, I might you might want to look somewhere else.
As the floors are so thin that I could hear
the guy yawn it boom. I think, how much do
you charge to write copy for from three man? Yeah?
(11:05):
I with my step mom, and then I'm I'll write
all kinds of bad reviews by anything I charged up.
What if some of you think is underrated? Also, she's
not gonna replace my mom. Yeah no, I'm just talking
about this, right, she's not because March seven, two thousand one.
I know, but she's not really trying to write. I
don't know you're still bringing this up. I'm fine, I'm fine,
(11:29):
it's fine. We weren't even making Blake that y'all review written, right, Hey, Blake,
what is something that's underrated? Blake? I don't even it's
very distracting what he's doing right now. Um the way,
I've never seen someone texts so hard in my time uh,
the screen under underrated. I would say free trials of things.
(11:51):
It's been a good year, um, but uh yeah. I
read this article recently about how much money free trials
have been cost thing millennials because they keep forgetting to
cancel them and then they're recurring subscription charge like it
was I don't remember the exact figure, but it is staggering.
But just set a reminder and then like when you
know you'll be home and you can cancel it and
(12:11):
then use a different email and sign up again. But see,
millennials suffer from what is it? Errand fatigue? Errand fatigue?
Is that real? Yeah? Interesting, It's a real thing where
it seems like the perfect generation to be like, yeah, man,
it's like a billion dollar industry. Is this on people
not having their ship together? Yeah? Yeah, I need to
(12:31):
just literally three buttons, right, yeah? Are you sure? Are
you sure? Are you sure? Yeah? The phone calls sometimes
it's a little tricky, But I do think that is
an entire industry that is benefiting from errand fatigue basically.
Oh yeah, I mean I think the only time I
was real quick to end the subscription was for a
porno site when I was getting what you want. I
(12:54):
got my first debit card and you could like do
ship like that, and I fucking I had like a
fucking I had a I was doing tally marks in
the wall and ship was counting down. Sixteen day trial
was over. Best believe I was done after that. I'm
just right now. I'm still paying for some kind of
like dog collar that tracks my dog. I use it once,
Oh don't, And I've been paying ten bucks a month.
(13:16):
I'm fuck man to think about how much money I've
given them. Don't think about it. It's best not to
think about this. That's not to think about it, and
just keep it going, right, Just move, change your building,
your dress. Did your dog still wear the collar? Hell no,
it's too bulky. That's the other part. I lost the
fucking thing, right. And then when I fired up, just
(13:36):
like says, it's somewhere like near my mom's house, right,
I don't know, it's all. It doesn't sound very exact,
you know, you know it probably has it? Huh, your stepmom? Sorry,
I don't know your real mom. Do you consider that
not my mom? Never be my mom. That's the point, though,
So mhould even say anything to do with her with
the word mom in it. That's true, you know what
(13:57):
I mean? Step lady, my dad's white step person feel me? Yeah, okay, okay,
Jesus Christ, all right, well what's that? What's the best
thing you got for free? What would the what would
you say? The best service you got for free? And
the mom you didn't want? No, I don't have that.
It doesn't seem as if this is a relatable conversation.
That's fine at this tape, right, okay? And I don't
(14:20):
know what my tone is. I don't know what. We've
been just watching the hell out of Hulu plus um
for the first few weeks, and it is paying dividings.
Why everything you say? I think being cheap is always
like a very funny personality. I mean under free trials.
(14:43):
EVE been watching the crap out of Hulu plus. What's
the myth here that that you shouldn't do free trials
because you're that is the myth? Yeah, easy, easy to
get around to, come on. Just the thing you have
to understand is you are scamming that that's a way
to motivate yourself, like you're this is all part of
the scamp. Their game is they think you're going to
(15:05):
forget to cancel it. So just set the reminder and
you just play a shell game with them with an
emails exactly thank you. There it is. That was that? Alright.
Let's talk about the d C movie universe, not the
best universe. Start out strong with for Nolan Batman's Batman
with Tim Burton Batman Independence Day was setting d C.
(15:25):
I like, don't understand the topic. Lincoln, Yeah, the Lincoln lawyer,
probably Lincoln lawyer. Yes, guy's never seen a commediot. He
hasn't been right about anything. There's no area of expertise
(15:45):
on horses, about sucking a horse with a sword. Right,
So Aquaman is now the biggest DC movie ever, surpassing
the Dark Knight. And I mean the Dark Knight was
only what ten years ago? Eleven years ago, so it
can't have been. Can't be that seven oh seven years ago?
(16:10):
So uh, it can't have been. It's not like just
pure inflation like Aquaman is. Oh I'm sorry, it's the
one that took the Dark Knight rises, right, I think? Uh,
the original Dark Knight was two thousand eight. Does Batman
begins two thousand eight Dark Knight? I give up? No,
Dark Knight was two thousand eight two eight. But that
(16:32):
was the second of this in the knowledge. Yes, anyways,
this is good podcasting. Reach out and let us know
when the Dark Knight was Twitter. We'll wait. Also, who
do you think Batman really is? That's a great question,
great questions. Uh So, anyways, they started out strong with
(16:57):
all the all the good Batman movies. And also I
was a huge Superman fan growing up. Anybody else big
Christopher ever I was. I was real into those. Uh.
I used to run around with my shirt off and
a towel wrapped around my neck. Uh that was the
cave min uh through high school and then I was
told that that wasn't socially acceptable. It was in high school. Yeah, yeah, no, no,
(17:22):
it was when I was five, but uh, you have
to clear that I was running for student government and
it helped. But anyways, now Aquaman is the biggest d
C movie ever. Aquaman. The idea that there would be
an Aquaman movie used to be a joke like that
was and I remember when that. I haven't seen it.
I'm not interested in seeing it. But even the trailer,
I was like, yeah, okay, I guess if you like
(17:45):
sp like water underwater, that looks like not underwater. Yeah,
everybody's moving around like they're just flying. What was the
deal here? Is it? Because just the international market has
expanded so much, right, Yeah, it's basically that The Dark
Knight did extremely well in America, but it only got
forty nine percent of its box office from overseas. And
(18:06):
now the overseas markets have grown so much that you know,
even though Aquaman, So I think Dark Knight was like
five thirty five million in America, four hundred sixty nine overseas.
Aquaman is three hundred and sixteen million in America but
seven hundred and seventy oas, So it's seventy one percent
of it is international boom one billion in the seas
(18:29):
for the fishing, right and hey like and under that's
it for shotgunting this look now, I'll be here all week.
You think it's is it? Is there a momoa factor?
Is his fucking long hair and smoky eyes? I mean
that that ship translates to all languages? Yeah, that's right,
(18:53):
Like you do not need and I mean this is
the thing with international like box office that they say
is that you know, we are going to see more
and more movies that are just focused on things that
translate no matter what, like you know, by action, uh
special effects and Jason Momoa they say by truth, they
(19:14):
say by Jason Momoa will be in every movie, right
and he will replace mathematics. Jason Momoa is the universal language.
I've heard that this movie is uh like aggressively stupid,
like to like almost intentionally so like Aquaman is dumb
in the movie, Like his character is just like what's
(19:38):
all man? Like? I literally heard that the movie. The
movie ends with him being like confused about having one
and then someone's like, no, you're the King of the
Sea now, and he like turns the camera and goes,
this is gonna be fun and that's credits the camera. Wow. Right, Yeah,
(19:59):
So I mean Dark Knight. Some people think Dark Knight
is the best comic book movie ever. I still probably
ride for the First Avengers because it's just more fun.
But Dark Knight is great. It's almost like a not
a comic book movie. It's not a it's it's more
like it looks like the toll that would take on
(20:19):
a human being to be Batman's dude. Bruce Wayne is
a weirdo. But then I'm like, of course you would
be if your every day trying to fight crime when
your parents were murdered, Yeah, I'll mess you up. Did
someone on like way when his parents would have been killed?
And so they said in the latest Batman, like I
(20:42):
think it's maybe the latest comic book. You know, Batman
takes place in the modern era, and his parents died
like what's seventeen years ago or something like from when
he like first child, right Batman begun? Uh, And so
they did the math, and we're like they would have
been coming out of space jam because because of the
(21:05):
like current day, Batman's parents would have been killed, leaving
like with their fancy pearls and ships like space Texedo. There, Bruce,
that felt quite derivative. I think Barkley is gonna make
a fine analyst some day. That's the last word. Bill
Murray killed me when he asked what kind of cameras
(21:28):
that right after they disappeared into that whole I have
to look up who did that math. We're gonna take
a quick break while I do that, and we'll be
right back. And we're back. And the author of said tweet,
(21:54):
which I'm about to read you is Daniel Kibble Smith,
who is a comic book writer and a writer for television.
He tweeted on January, hear me out if Batman is
canonically about thirty two, when then he was born in
six and if his parents were killed leaving a movie
theater when he was ten years old, then there's a
very real possibility. Then like three paragraph breaks that they
(22:17):
were seeing space jam, which is amazing to think about.
Sean Bradley is forty six years old. Yeah, right now
I should tweet that this instant. Right, Well, he was
always old, you know when he entered the league because
he did his mission. Yes, so that's something to keep
(22:41):
in mind. Was something I think like two old. Right. Alright, guys,
let's talk about the election specifically the show. Yeah, not
the not my favorite news show with John Stossel and
Barbara Walcher, but the the election that we're all facing.
(23:05):
First of all, Politico is reporting about how Wall Street
is not fond of two of the campaigns. Right. They
are shaking in their boots over Elizabeth Warren or Bernie
winning because you know, they have kind of an agenda
that's isn't favorable to predatory banks. The CEO of a
(23:26):
huge bank put it this way, it can't be Warren
and it can't be Sanders. It has to be someone's
centrist and someone who can win. Which is interesting how
he added who can win. That they can win, right,
they could win, that you wouldn't be scared of them. Yeah,
well when you look. Also look, I mean, Bernie's only
second to Biden, and like sort of this like the
(23:47):
you know, generic polls right now if the election were today,
I mean all we also don't know if they're going
to run for sure. Uh so, yes, Bernie could you know,
potentially win. But I guess what they mean is someone
who is just more like Fiver will be nicer to banks,
so that I think they name people like Corey Booker
or Christian Jillibrand or Kamala Harris. Although like they're pretty progressive.
(24:09):
I just feel like maybe because they haven't built careers
on being like, look at what Wall Street has done
to us right there, a little bit, uh, they feel
that it's a little bit easier with them. But I
think also to like this is just sort of based
off like a couple interviews, because at the end of
the day, they're gonna give to whoever they think is
going to be the president, because that's just how this
ship works. Well, right, and I think the I mean
(24:31):
this is almost an endorsement for Sanders and Warren, like
from right the perspective of their supporters, like you want
giant banks to not be fond of your candidate because
giant banks and you know, banking money is always always
seems to be the corrupting factor when it comes to politics.
(24:54):
I mean, yeah, that's just a good campaign sagan for
Elizabeth Warren. I got the banks shook, right, all right,
I'll vote, but we'll see I mean again. But then
you also have people like Kamala Harris, who on Sunday
kicked off her campaign in Oakland with a fucking bang, right.
I mean they're reporting that there were maybe like twenty
people that showed up the photos. Definitely, I would believe
(25:16):
that because she had had a lot of people come
out in her hometown and her you know, she came
out and spoke very clearly about where the country is,
where it needs to be going, what the dangers are,
and even touched on a few issues. You know, like
a lot of people have criticisms of her when she
was the Attorney General of California, the cop. Yeah, there
are people on the far left to be like she's
(25:36):
a cop or I'm really talking about her. She's she
didn't voice an opinion on certain three strikes laws that
were coming out. She felt it was it was inappropriate
for someone as attorney general to comment on some kind
of legislation like that, but also has you know, could
have been a little more aggressive in holding police accountable
for their criminal acts. But then you know, as she
was out there to make her speech, she points at
(25:58):
issues like that directly about prisoner for him and cash
bail and police violence and things like that is things
that have to be addressed. So she's definitely gaining momentum
uh and had a pretty good showing um. But the
other thing that has Democrats actually shook is the idea
of Howard Schultz, the former Starbucks CEO, running as an independent.
(26:21):
Did he announce that he is running I think yet? No,
not yet, But he's like doing a listening tour I
think in like Iowa, and hopefully he will listen to
people when they say take your fucking money and go home.
Just because you think it's too hard to run as
a Democrat and win that, don't just be like, well
then I'll just run. I'll be a self funded independent
(26:41):
third party candidate, a little large, call it a medium,
call it a small. Put the Sonics back in fucking Seattle. Howard. Wait,
is he to blame? I think so right. I think
Howard had a lot to do with Oh god, my
heart really goes out to Sonics fans day it. Let's
just say he can take the hit. Yeah, right, seriously,
(27:04):
he said when they drafted Kevin Garnett or Kevin Kevin Durant,
he was like, this kid's never gonna be any good,
and get this team out of my Russell Westbrook. He
dresses boring him here, let's go on. His pants don't fit.
They're too short cropped. But the thing, I mean a
lot of people, especially for Democrats, they're just frightened because
(27:26):
when you sort of look at how narrowly Hillary lost
electoral votes in like three states across like seventy five
seventies seven thousand votes. That's when you look at third
party candidates and you're like, oh, those are votes that
could have gone to the Democratic candidate. But I guess
you know, there's a few ways of looking at it too.
A while, they're sort of just like the initial just
(27:47):
like third party candidate means cannibalized votes means vote splitting
means Trump will you know, cruise to re election. There's
also a school of thought that, you know, the people
who could would really might end up voting for should
if he runs, would be like sort of softer Trump
voters who people are just like help like the people
who would you know, in post mortems about the election
(28:07):
last I had to hold my nose and vote for
Trump just because I couldn't vote for Hillary or whatever.
It's those people that could be swayed to Schultz rather
than probably like I'd imagine most people, if you identify
as a Democrat, you're not going to be like, well
I'll take Trump over of very radical Democrat, right, Uh,
So you know, we'll see. But again, it's it's definitely
(28:29):
I think a lot of people, I think, like Bloomberg
thought about running independently too, but was like, I feel
like an independent third candidate just means a re election
for Trump. So yeah, And I mean, he has a
pretty solid of the voting population. It seems like just
when you look at the fact that his approval still
(28:49):
hover around his approval polls, like if what he's done
thus far doesn't peel them off just saying in a poll,
I don't support him. I don't think Howard Schultz, being
a more centrist, less like fun to follow candidate, is
going to do anything to convert them. But yeah, I mean,
(29:12):
we'll see if we've definitely seen that the shutdown has
had an effect on the base a little bit in
terms of like their enthusiasm over certain you know, political
points that the president has been championing. But you know,
when there's all this like browbeating about like, oh, there
could be another shutdown, right, I'm curious to see how
people would react to that because they were definitely more.
(29:34):
You would hear more tales of Trump supporters who are like,
I supported the president and I still kind of do,
but this is actually harming me and I don't like that,
which has been interesting. But you know a lot of
people like that like to vote against yourself interest anyway. Yeah, guys,
who better to reform our system that is being killed
(29:56):
by inequality than a billionaire billion in theirs, especially one
who's like I don't need any of you, Right, I'll
buy this fucking thing if I want. This is my party.
I'm having my own party, the Bucks Party. Yes, must Starbucks. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
I got the Okay, cool, Yeah, I thought you patronizing
(30:17):
me like the stepma again. It's it's amazing that I
could almost just come out of nowhere seemingly. But anyway,
now you see him over it, it seems like I
am That's why I'm trying to move on. That's why
I'm saying, go to the next story. Okay. It does
change the mood each time you bring it up. Not
for me, maybe for you, But I'm the one living
(30:38):
in my head, so I know what it's like. Do
you know It's like I ever speak about what you're thinking.
I'm sorry, Yeah, that's cool. Um, so she's really mean. God,
it's like when I come in in the morning, he's
like listening to do She's just like listening in the court.
You got the life on the last and I do
the seawalk. Uh all right, I don't know if remember
(31:01):
that was dubb C from West Haide Connection in that video. Sorry, alright, guys,
let's move on to what what it's like to get
a tour of the White House from the President himself.
You might remember that early on in the Trump administration,
there would be you know, the normal White House tour
class trip, you know, when you sign up for a tour,
(31:23):
just any any old person. Sometimes Trump would just make
a surprise appearance. He would like jump out from behind
a curtain and be like, surprise, it's me the president.
This is a huge security risk. Everyone's like all right,
no they literally like a lot of people were scared. Um.
And then he would give a tour. So somebody looked
(31:45):
into I guess there's a new book. Everybody's got a book. Yeah, right,
another white House aid former, right, someone who got out
the circus and is telling us how what it was
like in Yes, a white House aid by the name
of Cliff Sims, the books sucking team of vipers. Yeah. Wow.
I would have gone with Dan like a den He's
(32:08):
trying to but see, Dan would throw people off. They
don't you know, a team of vipers I think for
every man and Roman Child. I am smart, You're right,
that's fine from that. Uh No, what I'm saying is
huh god, damn it. I heard I am all right,
Well this is getting sidetrack. You heard his film commentary movie. Yeah.
(32:32):
Lincoln Lawyer. He was a lawyer for that Lincoln Lugs
class action lawsuit. All the President's Men, my favorite DC
Universe movie. Uh So, Cliff Simms talked about what Trump
would be like giving tours to friends, politicians or whoever
got a tour from the president. Uh and there's some
(32:53):
fun details like basically it was all just him shading
the Clintons and Obama's Yeah, that's what he likes to do,
go around whenever people would come into the Oval Office,
Like apparently there's this thing like if he had people
over for dinner, it always turned into a tour like
right after and they're like, oh sure, and then go
to the like this is where Lincoln rested his head
(33:17):
when he came up the rights right there for you
to look on. But yeah, would go into the Oval office,
this president tabloids. Yeah, this is President Petty going into
the Oval Officers basically like gesturing like this is where
the scene this is the scene of the crime for
the Lynskey Clinton affair. So it says in a visit
in Trump told a TV anchor, I'm told this is
(33:38):
where Bill and Monica ellipsus stopping himself from going further.
And then it says three other people who have embarked
on a tour with Trump said he made similar comments
regarding the former president in White House intern laughing and
making facial expressions. The subject often leads to lengthy, sometimes
crass conversations. Wait, so facial expressions being the blow job
(33:59):
facial expression? I don't know, he just raises his eyebrows
up and down right everything over there. That's where Yeah,
I don't know, one even knew they were sexual innuendo,
(34:19):
right doing like chicken wing arm flapping like I don't
even know. But yeah, so I think he had a
record of making people uncomfortable somehow with his obsession with
the Clintons and talking about their you know, little trists
that were going on back there. Especially, I mean the
facial expression is really it's kind of awesome, right, but
(34:41):
the lengthy part is like also like people are almost
like right right, okay, like can we can I go? Right? Also,
where Kennedy like dealt with the crisis of the Cuban
missile crissis you know, like all sorts of important things
happened here, right, President Trump? Yeah, yeah, there was that
Jack Nicholson and Mars attacks in the Martians came. Remember. Yeah,
(35:06):
that's how off putting that man is, is that these
people are getting a once in a lifetime experience of
a tour of the White House, and they're just like,
I can't wait for this to be fucking over, so awful.
And then with regards to Obama, he just I think
this is partially him, like sort of projecting what his
day is like. But he said that his favorite narrative
(35:27):
around the Obama's was that they were bad tenants that
put like holes in the wall and that Obama sat
around watching basketball all day. Not racist, that racist fact,
it's not racist if that's the deal. He's black and
loves basketball all day and was a bad president. He
(35:48):
said he watched basketball all day. Yep. It seems like
that's what open trapped music or something. I don't know, right,
but yeah, they just said, yeah, whole was in the wall. Also,
he would repeated say, yeah, this place is in real
rough shape, like when he first got there, because I
remember like his first sort of thing of like just
(36:08):
trying to constantly allude to some fucking weird idea that
the Obamas are out of control tenants who's just bashing
the fucking walls in But yeah, and then but it's
just such a weird thing because then he brags about
how like how small the TV used to be in there, right,
And I was like, what I gotta look, that's big.
That's the gigantic. Did you build the big TV? Like
(36:31):
you made it better? So now you're in here watching TV? Okay,
well you know, yeah, we're gonna need a bigger TV.
We're gonna need a way bigger TV. Just Fox on
loop right. Well, speaking of the President watching Fox for
the first time, he might be seeing some things that
he does not like, because after he did his best
(36:53):
impression of a caveman, uh man, cave man got cocave
man Like, oh yeah, how can I from BBC or something? Yeah?
Scom Yeah, So apparently Trump is trying to bring back
that show about the caveman. He really this weekend. Yeah,
(37:17):
I went spill lunking when he caved this weekend. Uh,
Jack won't be into God watch out now. Um, oh
my god, you are wearing tissue boxes on your feet. Wow.
I thought that was a joke, a Farrell collap but
that's actually actual clean x um. Yeah, so go on.
(37:42):
So his bass is actually not very happy with him. Uh.
For the first time, he managed to alienate his base
finally by shutting down the government for over a full
month and then, you know, basically giving up the same
for the same deal that he was offered in the
first place. So the idea that he's you know, president negotiation,
(38:07):
President deals, uh, just seemed to evaporate before them, and
they were none too pleased with him. Donald Trump was
a type of dude I would say at high school
parties who would get their chain stolen from them in
front of them, Like someone would just pull up and
give me your chain. I think they would give They
would just give it up because they're not built for it.
And then you'd be like, I'll sell itude for twenty
(38:29):
bucks right now, and then they would buy it right back.
That's the kind of deal maker he is. He's so transparently,
like doesn't know where he is, he doesn't have a plan.
He just says ship and then it gets him into
this thing and yeah, look what happens. Like and Culture
and New Gingrich had a slap fight on Twitter basically
where he would leave that interaction bragging to everybody that
he got this chain for just twenty wait didn't yeah,
(38:55):
but it was yours. Well, he asked me, he said, Florid,
you first my my version of that story is sub
chain for boat shoes, and then that is of the
exact story, but untied. So he was tweeting over the weekend,
calling out specifically some Fox News reporters, or at least
(39:17):
trying to call them out for having, what he said,
less understanding of the wall than CNN and NBC, which
is the worst thing you can say about a person
in his circle. Unfortunately, he tweeted that at a Californian
teenager who had the same name as one of the reporters,
just spelled differently. Um, so he misspelled a person's name,
(39:39):
ended up typing the handle of some innocent yes who
got caught in the crosshairs and the first like negative
like clap back at a Fox News report. Imagine her mentions,
Uh yeah, and you imagine that poor girl being just
an innocent bystander in the culture war. Did he take
it down or is it still up? I'm sure he
(40:00):
doesn't take that right, That would imply a regret, right, Well,
there was. What's interesting too, is there was another Fox
anchor or presenter on Fox who like defended them and
like added the presidents like this is not right, Like
they're just reporting what happened, And so it's weird to
now have the thing that mainstream media has been saying that,
like we're not lying, this is what's happening. And then
(40:22):
now it's happening to Fox now because apparently there's limits
to their own you know, self delusion. Yeah, it seemed
impossible because Fox was basically state run media for a
long time and we've talked about how Trump is basically
media run state. But uh, and Culture like also just
talked about how he's a bad president and kind of wimpy. Yeah,
(40:45):
shehi is her biggest insult? What was her thing? And
she's like, oh, congratulations to George H. W. Bush, Like
you're no longer the whimpiest president ever because that's Trump now. Yeah,
And then like new Gingrich was like, he's like, you're
just being loud to sell books, Like you don't have
to listen to her, Mr President, right, don't take it personally,
And I think Trump was like I must not have
(41:05):
returned one of her emails or something said yeah, like
she's a scorned woman who's just mad at him. Also
and couled her apparently went on Bill maher and uh,
he was like when did you realize that Trump was
an idiot right now that you've had it, right, when
was that moment for you? Because okay, and and she
(41:26):
was like, you're right, I'm crazy, I'm an idiot, Like
I should have known better. So she's fully I mean,
not that this has any meetings because she changes her
opinions day to day. But so Trump was, you know,
out sniping at Fox News and yesterday morning Fox and Friends.
This is starting to have the feel of like a
(41:47):
bad breakup because Fox and Friends was like, the President
shouldn't care so much about what people in the media
are saying. It's like, that is your entire power is
that he watches your show every day and just takes
everything you say it's fact and compliments your job at school.
They're like, do you have a polka dot shirt? Polka
(42:07):
dots are in, Poka dots are in hammering in this person.
Find the person to change their whole wardrobe to all
polka dot the next day. Oh, polka dots are fucking dumb, right,
you look stupid? Now, Like hold on, you were y'all
were basically in his ear every day. But I guess
that's the power down is that they're just sort of like, okay, wow,
only listen to some people we love you, don't listen
(42:30):
to the bullies. We want to somehow be like an
ear wig that gets in your brain. I don't know,
and I'm not talking about this just to like kick
him while he's down. It just seems like a new
look for him that doesn't really fit with his overall
the vibe that his followers like seemed to want to
believe about him, that this like impervious, like just badass
(42:54):
who like nobody can get to him. And he's like
even when he's being you know, seemingly wrong, at least
he's belligerent, and so you can be like, well, he's
secretly doing this because he's playing twelve degree chess, but
like that doesn't work when he's like wounded and like,
oh guys, come on, you don't know what you're talking about.
Stop it. Stop being mean to me. And now sixty
(43:16):
one percent of Americans say America is on the wrong track.
He's doing badly in the polls, but still hovering around.
I think what forty nine percent or just under fifty
say they have no confidence whatsoever or at all. I
think was the wording in his ability to run the country. Yeah,
so that's a bad look, but it must look good
(43:39):
from the Kremlin. Yeah, I'm sure he's going to figure
out a way to get people revved up. He does
seem to have a talent for populism. So Rose is
my running maids, that would be amazing. We were out
give me. And there's a report out that his polling
(44:01):
is really in bad shape in states like Wisconsin, or
at least specifically in Wisconsin, almost half of the voting
population says that they specifically will vote for anybody who
runs against Trump, like they've decided they're not voting for
him already. So that's not a lot of room for error,
especially because he won Wisconsin by a very thin margin
(44:25):
last time. And it's like, okay, a new running mate,
Brad Farvan, Antonio Freeman. Right, it just remains to be
seen like it seems crazy because he won by the
thinnest margin, you know, maybe ever or close to ever,
of any president and has done such a bad job
since he came into office. But there does still seem
(44:45):
to be this base that refuses to acknowledge that. So
I feel like, one way or another, it's going to
be he's gonna make it close. I just don't know
how yet, because what he he won by less than
I think twenty five thousand votes in Wisconsin. Jesus, a
war would be. You know, he listens every day, right
(45:12):
he is like, oh God, don't say that. All right,
We're gonna take a quick break. We'll be right back.
And we're back, and Miles, you you're telling me about
(45:33):
a new kind of gimmick when it comes to how
our coffee is roasted. And it reminded me of something
Robert Evans apparently rediscovered this weekend, which is the marketing
plan behind the Pepsi's redesign of their logo. So you
talked about your coffee thing, and then I want to
take you through a little bit of that fair Uh.
(45:56):
You know, I'm just looking on the internet as I do.
But there's like this weird an article about like space
age coffee, and I look at it. There's a company
called space Roasters, okay, and they're giving coffee to the masses.
Bro because the way they're doing it is unlike any
other process. Right, Normally, you roast a bean and then
(46:16):
you grind that up to make your coffee. That sounds
old and boring. Yeah, because they're probably using they're probably
using ship like heat to roast it. What are you,
my grandma? Yeah exactly, Well you guess what these guys
are using? Fucking heat? What? Yeah? Also, but here's the
hook space heat because they're using re entry from space okay,
(46:36):
on like a space vehicle re entering Earth's atmosphere, and
that friction from the re entry is used to then
heat the coffee beans to roasted. So what they do
is they describe it as they have a space roasting capsule.
The heat from re entry will be quote distributed around
four cylinders each containing coffee beans floating in microgravity. The
(46:57):
beans will be evenly heated and roasted during the process.
The capsule will then be recovered after landing with parachutes. Okay,
when you're when you when you're adding that detail, you
mean you have nothing else to talk about. Uh. The
entire procement only last twenty minutes, but will end with
a marvelous aroma as the hatch is opened. Now again,
I do not know. They don't in in what I've read,
(47:18):
I have not read anything about why space heat is
more advantageous than terrestrially from because it's from space right right,
But that's what the fuck? No, it's more energy. Yeah,
in space, a space space space brew. I remember that
was a thing. Well, I remember growing up that there
(47:42):
was a thing where we had tomato seeds that they
were going to take into space and then bring them
back and we were going to grow to see if
they like changed at all. Did you guys remember that,
my teacher, Yeah, these are tomatoes, were sending them the
(48:04):
space ya um, space pizza. But anyways, I have always
wanted my coffee to be toasted by the same thing
that killed the Columbia Space Shuttle. You have always I
have always said that that the seven member crew of
the Columbia Space Shuttle, the thing that took them down.
I want that to be roasting my morning cup. So
(48:27):
it's just so we like the Apollo thirteen fire in
the like even the like the press release that like
you know, inquiring minds would receive, like journalists like. Some
of the quotes are just like coffee has been roasted
the same way for centuries now, and as space science
has improved many technologies, we believe it is time to
(48:48):
revolutionize coffee roasting using space technology. I've not again heard
that like being suspended in gravity brings out other dimensions
of flavor, or that this heat is different than other.
That's what it's just good. Don't take of change. I
guess yeah, it's progressive even then, so on ours, technically,
they tried to break down, like what this even costs. Like, okay,
(49:09):
so you're saying you get seventy five kilows up their
times whatever. So they said, for the sake of argument,
let's assume the company can launch a five capsule into
a hundred eighty kilometer suborbital trajectory, because that's how they
envision a hundred eighty kilometer suborbital trajectory, being the way
that they achieved that heat. They say, assuming all three
ms of beans are roasted optually, this comes to per
(49:31):
kilogram of roasted beans, there between ten and fifteen grams
of coffee beans and a cup of coffee. So even
on the lower end, just for the rocket cost, that
is two hundred dollars per cup of coffee. Those are
lack colomb prices. Oh my god, you're bleeding from your nose.
I don't know what that meant. La colombo. Oh my god,
(49:52):
you gotta that's those fancy No, that's that's what we
call it now on the streets. Um, the luck Lomba
is like that canned latte that Sophie always buys. It's
always freaking out when it's not there. It's like we're
at a lock alone. Yeah that's right. And now they
have but they have a few shops in a frog town.
Yeah exactly. But yeah, what the fund are you gonna do?
(50:14):
And then they're saying, that's just the raw cost of
attaching it to like getting a space flight, right, because
you're picking backing off someone else's like million dollar operations.
It's shitty coffee. That's the thing. You have to understand.
The beans sucked, it's just folders. But it's been to space.
What we do is we get five batch and then
we put a little bit of that. We spread that
five hundred kilograms over ten thou backs, right, yeah, and
(50:36):
it's just you ban but you're gonna love it. I mean,
the most expensive cup of coffee I've ever heard about
is the coffee with the beans that go through a
BET's digestive track, yeah, or a monkey one. Right. Yeah,
it's various beans that get eaten because there's seeds of fruit,
coffee beans and so they get eaten by the animal
(50:59):
shipped out, and people pay huge amounts of money to
make their coffee out of those beans that have been pooped. Um,
that makes more sense to me than roasting the coffee
in a thing that's like space, because you can argue
that their digestive track is something different than just something
(51:19):
as basic as heat. That's the claim that they make,
is that, like by going through the digestive track. But
even then, I remember some strange things. I remember when
we brought it up and then every zygang was on
Twitter being like I've had it. It's ship. Also the
way it's made problematic, it's bullshit. I'm like, yeah, I
get it. I mean nothing about I think it's purely
for someone who gets so off on the idea that
(51:40):
they're drinking coffee that has been has some kind of
unique backstory. But I haven't even read where the fucking
beans come from. Like, I think that's more important than
how you're fucking roasting. The roasting method, bro roasting method
of costing US eight hundred billion dollars. Take that goddamn beast,
bad monkey, whatever it is that eats the beans, put
(52:01):
it in a space, beat it. Those beans, have it
ship in space, then put it out. Wow, right, we
figured it out. We've cracked the code. Uh, we're gonna
edit this part out. You will never hear another episode
of The Daily Side guys, because this is our business
model going forward again. I just have to bring up again.
(52:22):
Even through all their fucking materials, all of it is
focused on how you just roast something with space heat.
There's nothing to do with the flavor or the experience
of the finished product, and they just talk about it. Yeah,
I don't get what you don't get, Miles. It's going
to space. It's space heat, it's re entry. I know,
I haven't seen Apollo thirteen. I sound like the sober
(52:44):
friend when these two guys who must have done so
much blow when I figured this out, I'm the sober
friend who's like, yeah, but what's different, No, dude, fucking
it's fucking space. The heat is from space, dude. It's
not like fucking fire, dude. And then that's that can
tell him, dude different. Jesus guy, he's just you know,
(53:06):
between that and you're past whatever. Fine. So I did
want to bring up the redesign of the Pepsi logo
because Pepsi back in I don't know, it was like
two thousand seven or so, spent a hundred million dollars
on having a new logo design. How much a hundred
(53:27):
million dollars several hundred million dollars I'm sorry, several hundred
million dollars to go from the wavy thing to like
the guy's ass. Yeah, it looks like it's a a
sunburnt plumber bending over with his underwear peeking out. Oh yeah,
it doesn't look like But so in order to make
(53:47):
that transition, a design firm had to justify like how
brilliant this change was, because the Pepsi company side by
side it looks like the most minimal fuck change. So
Gawker got their hands on a twenty seven page document
back in the day titled Breathtaking Design Strategy, and it
(54:10):
contains like all the references to the fucking Golden ratio
feng Shui. Uh. There's like this thing that it has
an X access that says convention to innovation, and then
Y access that says d n A to the future,
and it puts the like old Pepsi logo on one,
and then it's like the future is now with the
(54:31):
new one. Um wait, that's merely to just like create
the metaphor of what so there's nothing because when I
saw that, I'm like, what the funk is? This doesn't
even make sense, Like, no, they're just so that they
include the Mobia strip the Earth geo dynamo and then
(54:52):
comparing that to the Pepsi logo. It's just amazing. Do
they think the consumer on this one be like funk
with it? Because they incorporated sacred geometry into this, Well,
there's really good one. Their thesis is that like they're
tapping into all this like subconscious subconscious stuff and like
(55:13):
this is the future for pepsi. But it's just it's
truly a remarkable document of like just how screwed we
are as a species. I was so confused when I
saw Robert tweeted out and then I saw you retweet it,
and I just started looking through and I thought it
was some kind of like bad scientific presentation that was
(55:35):
just lazily using Pepsi logos because like the diagrams are
way too excessive for like merely like a marketing deck
that I was like, no, this has to be some
kind of science and ratio yeah, I did, because I
was like, oh, this is some other ship, and then
I didn't know that this was then what they were justifying. Okay,
(55:56):
I know you paid us a hundred million dollars to
turn that little wavy thing into a more angular like brushstroke.
Oh man, we're in the wrong business man. I could
put together a deck like, oh my god, people have
cracked the code. We need to look into what these
people were doing during the two thousand and sixteen election,
because they have cracked the code of how to just
(56:19):
justify anything to anyone. Yeah. Um god, I wonder if
the Pepsi people who were in marketing that hired that
firm were like in hot water, like after some of
those hold on, hold on, what the funk was that
we paid that guy? That guy was on coke r
and he just just talked about space. We just wanted
a logo redesign. Well, I'm sure this document was the
(56:41):
result of the company sending in a version and the
Pepsi marketing person who was like, trust me, it's worth
hundreds of millions of dollars going back and being like
I'm gonna need a little more than that. I didn't
need a little more until it's just like the geodesic
dome man think about it. They're like, what the Earth's
geo dynamo? Like, we just asked, what's testing better with
(57:03):
younger people? Because all this other ship six hours later,
it's probably like working for Trump because like there was
that thing where he just out of nowhere was like
there's women being duct tape bound at the border of
these human trafficking things, and then Border Patrol like sent
an urgent email everybody like does anybody have anything that
might even in a like tangential way back up this
(57:24):
like weird claim he just made and it was crickets really, yeah,
that has he said that dumb ship? Yeah, and they're
like Border Patrol they were like, uh is this true?
And there was like someone forward an email that like
people asking if they had heard of anything so detailed. Yeah,
but yeah, that's what they said, is that retroactively constructing
the narrative is like anybody who edited on The Apprentice
(57:47):
says they totally recognized like what it's like to be
a White House employee or just anybody working for Trump,
because he would just do stuff on a whim that
didn't make any sense, Like he'd be like you're fired
and they're like, no, they're supposed to like, they're doing
the best. Everybody likes them, but he would just fire them,
and then they'd have to like construct some narrative out
of the footage that made that person look bad, and
(58:10):
it's just it's just another season of his reality show. Basically,
those poor editors, I know nothing worse than be like, hi,
make the person who never screwed up the whole show
look like a total fucking ass whipe. I don't know,
I say like that in this show. God, yeah, well,
look shout out to editors, editors all around the world,
(58:33):
especially for this episode. And then that person whose mistakes
he always had to clean up ends up being the president.
You just spend every day seeing him make the same
exact mistakes that you covered up before. I'm so distraught.
I think the only thing that can help me is
a nice cup of space coffee right now. Yeah, I mean,
so much of like medicine and how our body behaves
(58:56):
is the placebo effect. So I mean, maybe maybe based
coffee will be better. I just want somebody to give
me the follow up piece as to why space heat
is different from again space imna be waiting how many
times how don't be amazing if you just get a
thousand tweets being like space Blake, it's been a pleasure
(59:22):
having you for the most part, and that's the nicest thing.
While being honest, you could say to me, this guy's
in bad shape. Yeah, uh, where can people find you?
Follow you at Blake, Wexler, everything and simple. Is there
a tweet you've been enjoying? Oh yeah, actually this tweet?
(59:42):
Maybe laugh just because of how silly and weird it is. Um.
This is from my friend Luke g or Dono on Twitter.
Cars get louder when speeding because the faster you go,
the more it hurts them. Race cars are constantly screaming
and excruciating pain. That's so funny, so weird. It's like
(01:00:04):
that reminds me of like in The Fast and the
Furious movies, Like the way that you win it. Racing
is just pushing the gas down like even harder and
just like why did you put down that hard from
the beginning? Yeah, I'm really doing it this time. I'm
serious about going fast. Uh, gotta live life one quarter
mile at a time. Thank you, thank you, thank god.
(01:00:25):
Someone said it miles Where can people find you find me?
On Twitter and Instagram at Miles of Gray. Uh, this
is just you know, a great one from Reductress because
I just this sum's up my attitude says. It's a
woman with a very disappointed face, and it says everyone
immediately making fun of Carrie's music choices after insisting she
(01:00:46):
be in charge of the Spotify That is the worst
fucking hill to die on, Like when people really puff
their chests up about like let me take over, you know, like,
and that happens a lot now because we're in an
era where it's everyone just sort of e jay off Spotify,
and there's nothing more satisfying than someone who really like
tries to hijack the stereo and then comes in with
(01:01:07):
the just the biggest l restures, big out restupes, uh,
you know, out the gates. So that's that. There. You
go follow me there. You can find me on Twitter
at Jack Underscore O'Brien. A couple of tweets I've been
enjoying Sarah Baby at Nacho. Sarah tweeted, go into a
special place in Hell sounds cool because who wants to
(01:01:29):
go to regular hell and have to like hang out
with a n culter? And Ian Carmel Big Karma tweeted
p J. Tucker's i G is so good and pure.
It's just him posting amazing sneakers he's gonna wear and
all his basketball friends going bro, don't do it to
him in the comments, but they do want him to
do it to them. They do, they want it and
(01:01:53):
his i G is great? So U yeah go follow
p J Tucker. Uh. You can find us on Twitter
at daily Zey Guys. Were at d Daily Zey Guys
on Instagram. We have a Facebook fan page on a
website Daily zy Guys dot com. Whereas episodes in our
foot where we link off to the information that we
talked about in today's episode, as well as the song
(01:02:14):
we ride out on miles what's second? Uh? This is
a song Okay, that's all we need to know. Thank
you so much, fantastic and that's that gotta go. Uh. Yes,
So this is from New Optimism, which is actually Miho
ha Toori who is the from Chibamato uhur new project.
And this song is called dr Myho Uh. And you
(01:02:38):
know it's just something different, you know, something Actually I've
been playing a lot of Japanese music recently, but yes,
let's take this one. Put it in our ear, godless goblets. Interesting,
so royal, thank you. Um all right, we're gonna write
out on that. We'll be back tomorrow because it is
a daily podcast, and we'll talk to you guys then
(01:02:59):
by come in. I looked to my heart, specifies me
to outflow and cat allergy, me won't drink and the
pain on shain your so you'll never sit down. I'm
took to my heart O so many. I don't care
where I'm afraid as where I can't see where to